Jacqueline Windh, BSc, MFA, PhD — Writer, and more…

Videoblog

Welcome to my video blog! I was trying to make this a monthly feature, but I’ve found that I don’t have the time to do it so regularly. So these are just random little films, put together when the inspiration hits and my time allows.

I am a professional photographer, writer and broadcaster. I do not claim to be a professional film-maker! I don’t even own a real video camera – these are just shot on my point-and-shoot stills cameras (Nikon Coolpix 8400 and Coolpix P80). They’re just for fun, and not meant to be any sort of example of my professional work.

The band Mojave (my friends Lisa and Paul Jarvis) looped through Port Alberni on the way back from their latest tour through Vancouver and Victoria, and gave this wonderful private concert performance for my friends right here in my house! In this clip are a shortened version of “Save Me,” and the title song from their last album “Crow’s Funeral.”
You can hear studio versions of these songs and more on the Mojave website. (This video uploaded with permission from the musicians).

This video is just a quick tour of my balcony garden here in Port Alberni – yes, how I grow food in containers right here on my balcony! I shot it to go with my July 20, 2011, blog post How to grow veggies even if you don’t have a back yard! just to show that it really can be done.

And it’s worth it… the basil, and tomatoes, and green beans that I have been getting this summer are delicious! Can’t get fresher than that (like, the 1-meter diet).

Once in a blue moon – no, even less often than that – it’s actually only once a year, on the summer solstice new moon, low tides draw the ocean away and expose the sea cave that links Chestermans Beach to Cox Bay. For most of the year, this cave is inaccessible by land. But for a few days, this becomes my favourite running route – a 10 km loop taking in two of the world’s prettiest beaches, and never setting my foot on pavement. (Featuring Canadian elite ultrarunner and coach, Jen Segger).

Yup, only in Tofino. April 28th 2010 marked Tofino’s 6th annual Box Parade. It all got started when a girl named Jules got bored at work, so she and a friend started making costumes out of the boxes and then walked around town in them. Well, somehow it caught on, and six years later, the Box Parade, held on Jules’ birthday, has become a much-anticipated annual event. See for yourself!

OK, this video is not fine art – filmed in my living room on a dark winter’s afternoon. But it is pretty useful info. Doctors have a way of taping your ankle so that you do not re-twist it – but they are so good at reducing your mobility that you won’t be able to run when it is taped like that. Here is an easy way to tape your ankle that immobilizes the ankle in direction of the sprain, but allows you the mobility so you can stil walk, run, and even leap! Very useful info for racers and hikers who must keep moving even after a sprain.December 2009

Ucluelet’s Wild Pacific Trail (coming soon!)

I know I know, October is almost over… I’m just really busy right now. I’ll get my October film up as soon as I can – keep an eye on Twitter (or the front page of my site) for news of when it is posted.

November 2009

OK, November didn’t really happen as far as filming goes. I may be able to post something here later, “from the archives”.October 2009

Project Athena in the Grand Canyon (coming soon!)

I know I know, October is almost over… I’m just really busy right now. I’ll get my October film up as soon as I can – keep an eye on Twitter (or the front page of my site) for news of when it is posted.

It’s hard for us humans to visualize what life is like when you are small, sensitive and cold-blooded. Welcome to Kermit’s World. Amazing close-up footage of my little green buddy reveals to the world of the warm-blooded what things matter in a treefrog’s life (mainly bugs, sunshine, and clean water).

Twenty-eight year old Jen Segger believes that it is important to set goals: big goals. So, when she decided to bike and run the length of Vancouver Island from north to south, of course she did not plan to go by the shortest route. Instead, she planned a 750 km odyssey that would take her through the Island’s most iconic foot-trails, from the mountains of Strathcona to the West Coast Trail, and then linking these foot sections by travel logging roads on her mountain bike. Oh yes, and she decided to do the whole thing in just four days. I joined her for the middle section of her journey, as she biked from Port Alberni to Bamfield, and then ran the West Coast Trail.

A short film about why I choose to bike around, rather than drive, in my home village of Tofino, as well as when I travel. Parts of this film were shot in Vancouver the week that the new dedicated bike lanes opened up on the Burrard Street Bridge. Families from both small town and big city show that biking is a reasonable and legitimate form of transport – even for those with young children.

Joe Martin and I talk about the book – how we came to be involved with Germany’s Westfalian Museum of Natural History, and why we believe it is important to talk about the effects of European contact on First Nations and of Canada’s Indian Residential School system.

Who is Jacqueline Windh?

I am both a scientist and a communicator: writer, photographer, and public speaker. I don't believe in limiting myself to one medium to convey my ideas. It's not that big a deal to master the technology; I use the medium that best suits my story.
I am author or co-author of four published books (and there are more coming!) and my articles and stories have been published in quality magazines and newspapers around the world.
My photographs have appeared in magazines around the world and in four solo shows in Canada and Europe.
My radio documentaries have played on CBC Radio (Canada) and internationally, and I have spoken at numerous venues across North America (from The Explorer's Club in New York to museums and outdoor clubs across North America) and I am a TEDx speaker.Read my bio.

Where is Jacqueline right now?
Spring is here! Mostly, I'm hanging out close to home, here on Vancouver Island - getting out on the trails with the dogs, and photographing flowers and hummingbirds.
I'm still sorting photos from an amazing 6 week adventure to southernmost Patagonia this winter (their summer), and working on publications related to that trip - as well as moving forward with two book projects.
I'm not running much at the moment - coming back from a knee injury - but I'm walking the trails most days and working at building that knee up again!